Yeah, that community service, the community service he was ordered by a judge to do after he beat Rihanna. He was ordered to do six months’ worth of it, and he completed it. OR DID HE?
Chris Brown will have to wait a bit longer before checking in with an L.A. judge regarding how much community service he’s performed since he was convicted of felony assault on then-girlfriend Rihanna in 2009.
A court appearance scheduled for Monday has been pushed back a week to allow authorities more time to prepare the singer’s probation report.
At issue: The number of hours of community labor — roadside cleanup, graffiti removal and the like — that Brown’s done since a judge gave him the OK to do part of his duty in his home state of Virginia.
A deputy DA in L.A. ordered an audit of his hours after alleging in July that recent records were unclear on details such as where, when and what work was done.
After Brown’s previous L.A. court appearance, in February 2011, the judge changed a restraining order regarding Rihanna from “stay away” to “do not annoy.” This past February, attorney Mark Geragos’ good-behavior-based request that his client’s probation be changed from supervised to unsupervised was denied.
While Breezy has completed anger-management classes and a 52-week domestic-violence education program as part of his sentence, he’s still got the balance of an original 180 hours’ community service, plus five years’ probation that started in August 2009.
I’m fairly sure that everyone that’s not on “Team Breezy” or whatever can agree that there’s at least a possibility that Chris fudged some hours here and there. Like, “oh, yeah, I was in Virginia and I cleaned all the roads for two days straight, write it down!” But then again, I really wouldn’t put anything pass Chris Brown.